Ask Captain Lim ~ All about Aviation

Friday, 16 May 2008
Home arrow Flying the Plane arrow When does an Airline pilot retire from flying?
Friday, 16 May 2008
Main Menu
Home
Welcome
Ask Me
Forum
Disclaimer
Privacy
Search
Links
Pilot Career
Becoming a Pilot
Female Pilots
Education
Medical Examination
Eyesight
Height
Age
Interviewing Process
Aptitude Tests
Flight Simulator
Training
Technical Questions
OnLine Stores
Professional Pilot
General
Licenses & Ratings
A320 Training Videos
Salary
Job Opportunities
Flying
Air Travel
Airways
Ditching
Dr JB Lim's Corner
Emergencies
ETOPS
Fear of Flying
Flying on the Boeing 777
Flying the Plane
Medical
Profession
Pilot Career
Aviation
Airlines
Airplanes
Airports
Air Crash
Air Crash Investigations
Air Safety
Humor
B777 Photo/Routes/Seats
Video
Stories, Truths & Myths
Weather
Air Turbulence
Contrails
Crosswinds
Icings
Lightnings
Night Flights
Thunderstorms
Windshears

Click Here for Searches on Weather News & Forecast

Google
 


When does an Airline pilot retire from flying?

Written by Capt Lim, on 17-12-2007

Published in : Flying, Profession

Hi Capt Lim,

I chanced upon your informative website. Thumbs up for the enlightening site!

I have a few questions for you.

How does the career of an International Airline pilot ends? At what age will an airline ask the pilot to stop flying?

If a pilot develop short-sightedness several years into flying as a First Officer, would his career be over? Would anything like health problems end his flying career? Will the airline give him a ground appointment based on his experience?

Kindly advise

Regards,

Gordon

Hi Gordon,

Internationally, an airline pilot can fly up to 60 years. The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) retains as a standard, an age-60 limit for persons acting as pilot-in-command of an aircraft engaged in scheduled international air services or non-scheduled air transport operations for remuneration or hire and recommends that the co-pilot also be under age 60.

The rule is also enshrined in section 121 of the USA's Federal Aviation Regulations and it mandates that a pilot may not fly in revenue service for a Part 121 air carrier upon reaching his or her 60th birthday. This retirement age applies only to pilots with (FAR 121) airlines, it does not apply to FAR 125 or 135 operations, nor "corporate" pilots. However, not all airlines adhere to these rules. Some airlines make 55 years as the mandatory retirement age.

When a First Officer or even a Captain becomes short-sighted, it is not a problem provided his vision can be corrected to normal with optical aids. Not every illnesses will cause the pilot to be grounded for ever. If he recovers from a medical problem and pass the medical test, he can regain his medical status and continues to fly again. However, if a pilot is grounded, say, because of a heart problem, he may be employed by the airline as a simulator instructor if he is already qualified.

Save this to del.icio.us

Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 
 

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.5 © 2007-2008 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
 
< Prev   Next >

Free Page Rank Tool

Latest Comments
A cadet pilot sharing his...
Psychomotor Skills Test
Hi James, Your scores are very good....
14/05/08 13:22 More...
By Captain Lim

A cadet pilot sharing his...
aptitude test
I took a similar aptitude test for the...
14/05/08 12:06 More...
By james

Would a marijuana possession...
Mr.
Would a single expunged marijuana...
09/05/08 17:55 More...
By Aaron Kinberg

Old Aviators and Old...
The Mustang story . . .
Hello, My name is Lea MacDonald, and as...
04/05/08 08:32 More...
By Lea

Why was Boeing 777 pilot...
Cathay Boeing 777 Captain loses appeal..
For the latest on the above, please...
19/04/08 14:55 More...
By Captain Lim

© 2008 Ask Captain Lim ~ All about Aviation
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.